Skip to main content

tv   The Situation Room  CNN  April 16, 2013 6:00pm-7:00pm EDT

6:00 pm
>> the problem there is that all the materials that are suggested in this attack are very readily available, wolf, which means it may be that much harder to find who's responsible. >> that's what this investigation is all about right now. chris lawrence, thanks very much. happening now, new details about the bombs used to attack the boston marathon. investigators say the hunt for a suspect is still wide open. they're asking the public for help. gut-wrenching stories of young lives cut short. the mother of a 29-year-old victim speaking out just a short while ago. and we're reconstructing the scene of the bombings to show you exactly what investigators are looking for, and the places where clues may be hidden right now. i'm wolf blitzer in boston. we want to welcome our viewers in the united states and around the world. this is a special edition of "the situation room." "the situation room." boston marathon bombings.
6:01 pm
-- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com here in boston, we're seeing a lot of raw emotion, determination to honor the victims of the marathon terror attack. and to find out who is responsible. if you're just joining our team coverage, here are some of the latest developments. investigators have just confirmed publicly that the bombs used in the attack were likely placed in pressure cookers, and that hidden in a nylon bag or backpack. they're asking witnesses who may have seen someone with a bag like that to contact them as soon as possible. president obama will travel here to boston on thursday for a religious interface service, dedicated to the three people killed in the attack and the more than 180 people injured. we now know the name of another of the three people who died, her name krystle campbell, 29 years old. her mother spoke out a little
6:02 pm
while ago in tears, saying she and her family are heart broken. we also just learned that the third person who died was a boston university graduate student. investigators here in boston say their hunt for a terrorist -- for a suspect in these terror bombings is still preliminary, and this case, they say, is wide open. >> among items partially recovered are pieces of black nylon, which could be from a backpack, and what appeared to be fragments of bbs, and nails, possibly contained in a pressure cooker device. in addition, this morning, it was determined that both of the explosives were placed in a dark colored nylon bag or backpack. the bag would have been heavy because of the components believed to be in it. >> let's bring in our chief national correspondent john king working his sources, doing serious reporting on what's going on. it's clearly a preliminary stage at its infancy.
6:03 pm
the fbi agent in charge says of this investigation. >> only a little over a day old, this investigation. but you do start to sense a bit of frustration from sources you talk to in private, and at the public briefing, you heard the fbi special agent in charge, asking anyone who might think, would have any slightest clue, did you know anyone who might have had a big black nylon bag, who might have said something disparaging about the marathon, clearly what i'm told by sources, the public briefing they said there were no suspects as yet. what i'm told in private is a frantic review of the video evidence under way. there are gaps in the forensics so far in terms of they have video images of the sites where the explosions are. possible video images of the devices on site. no video at least in the conversation a short time ago showing any suspicious person or persons dropping a package and trying to leave. that is an appeal to anyone, if they have any image that might help the investigation in this investigation.
6:04 pm
part of the debris, including what he believes were fragments in a pressure cookers were sent to the crime lab in quantico. try to reconstruct the explosive device, and then hope they can find a fingerprint, dna, some signature that might lead them to an individual or to an organization. i can tell you, though, at this point, wolf, all the sources i have talked to, they say this is not a bluff. that they have no suspect identified so far. they had a saudi national identified as a person of interest. they conducted a search of his apartment and said that individual has been cleared. in the wrong place at the wrong time. you have in the second full day of the investigation, thousands of federal, state and local authorities. the crime scene right over there, the restricted area was 15 blocks, it's been cut down to about 12 blocks now. essentially they're looking, and you heard the atf representative saying they're finding debris on rooftops, trying to get the
6:05 pm
evidence to rebuild and get clues. it tells you at this point in the investigation, they're stymied. >> and that forensic lab at quantico in virginia, the fbi lab, they're going to try to piece together as much as they can to see if it fits other bombs that they may have seen, whether here in the united states or elsewhere around the world, explode over the years. >> and our terrorism experts can do a better job than i can, but makes the investigation as they described it, so difficult, it the sense that this is a relatively crude device. a device used by al qaeda, used by the taliban in the past, but, i want to stress this, from all of our sources, from all of our reporters, producers and koeshts, zero evidence, zero evidence of any communications, any intelligence suggesting a foreign terrorist involvement as yet. and even though this has been used, this type of technology has been used by al qaeda and taliban in the past, it is also sadly in this age of the internet a technology you can go online and essentially find a
6:06 pm
how-to to build a bomb like this. no one has ruled out domestic terrorism, or this being a single lone wolf bomber, perhaps someone with help. right now, they say those are among the many, many questions. >> and it's significant also that no one has claimed responsibility. there's almost a thunderous silence, if you will. that speaks volumes to a lot of these investigators. >> if you look past backwards, past terrorist attacks, obviously if it's al qaeda, if it's al qaeda an the arabian peninsula, even a domestic political group trying to make a point, often there's a claim of responsibility in the first day or two. the silence is part of the investigation, and a reminder to us that what is not being said and what we don't know is perhaps much more important than what we do know. >> john, don't go too far away. moments before the terror attack here in boston, 29-year-old krystle campbell was waiting at the finish line at the marathon to cheer on the runners. now she's dead. her identity was confirmed only
6:07 pm
a few hours ago. jason carroll was in the campbel campbells' hometown of medford. jason, what are you learning? >> just a terrible story, wolf. like so many other stories. a little while ago patty campbell came out on her front porch, she tried to speak about her daughter but she was so overcome by grief, she just simply couldn't do it. the story, a tragic case of a mix-up. let me explain more about what happened to krystle campbell. she got caught in the first explosion. and then, wolf, shortly thereafter, taken to the hospital, and her parents were told that she was okay. that they were working, trying to save her leg. shortly after the operation, her parents came into the room and learned it wasn't her at all that had survived. it was her friend. so you can imagine how terribly awful they feel at this point. how they're trying to deal with the loss of their daughter, trying to deal with this
6:08 pm
tragedy. just a short while ago, patty campbell came out, tried to speak to the press, but eventually a spokesman had to say what she simply could not. >> we're heart broken at the death of our daughter krystle marie. she was a wonderful person. everybody that knew her loved her. she loved her dogs. she had a heart of gold. she was always smiling. i couldn't ask for a better daughter. i can't believe this has happened. she was such a hard worker at everything she did. this doesn't make any sense. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> what kind of daughter was she, ma'am? >> she was best. you couldn't ask for a better daughter. >> and the statement is from patty campbell, the mother of
6:09 pm
krystle campbell. we are heart broken at the death of our daughter. she was a wonderful person. everyone who knew her loved her. she was sweet and kind and friendly. always smiling. she worked so hard at everything she did. >> and wolf, just a short while ago, i reached out to massachusetts general hospital, just trying to get some clarification about what the campbells are saying, what happened to their daughter. spokeswoman telling me they're still in the process of gathering information, trying to determine exactly what happened before they could release a statement. but it just goes to show you, in the hours after what happened, there was so much confusion, in some ways, even some of the most experienced trained doctors, things like this can happen. wolf? >> can't tell you how awful it must be, how awful for patty campbell, the mother of krystle campbell. it's shocking to me she could even go out there and even try to make a statement.
6:10 pm
i know she tried. and our hearts, of course, go out to her, to the entire family, the families of the other victims, those who were killed. they were all so young. a young boy, now we learn a graduate student at boston university. i don't know how people cope under these circumstances. and dozens of others of parents and family members and friends, they know, those who are seriously critically injured, losing limbs, this is such a horrendous situation. it makes no sense whatsoever. and investigators are trying to figure out what happened. >> that's exactly right. imagine, wolf, the relief at first when you find out that something like this has happened to your family, and you're relieved that at least they're okay. then it becomes the worry as you're hearing that doctors are working, in this case trying to save her leg. then, of course, you're dealing with the grief upon learning about what really happened. and then in a sense, some anger
6:11 pm
as well, trying to sort out how something like this could have happened. it's all of the emotions that this family is trying to deal with. >> please send our love to the family, if you have a chance to speak with them over there in medford, jason. thanks very much for that report. >> absolutely. >> such a sad story indeed. and to our viewers, if you're looking for ways to help people affect by the boston bombings, go to cnn.com/impact. a lot of good opportunities to do something positive as a result of this horrendous, horrendous tragedy. let's take a closer look at this -- these terrorist bombings. tom for mn and a former fbi assistant director, both standing by. tom foreman, give us a little sense of what's going on here as far as this investigation is concerned. >> wolf, tom and i have been talking all day long about three critical time periods that have to be considered in all this. let me bring in the crime scene so we can talk about what we
6:12 pm
mean. first critical time period, the actual time of the explosion. we know that about 17,000 runners had already crossed the finish line on boylston street, another 6,000 headed that way when the first big bomb went off just short of the finish line. and about two football fields away, 12 seconds later the second bomb went off. obviously those sites, tom, are critical to investigators in terms of physical evidence. what are they looking at right now. >> tom, the first thing they want to do is recover as much of the bomb device as they can, to help identify who may have made it, how it was constructed, and get an idea whether right there it would help focus whether it's international or domestic, or a group that's been seen before by the way it was put together. so first issue is get pieces of that bomb, as much evidence of the explosive device, and the material contained in the device as they can. >> we've been hearing bits and pieces about that, like a nylon bag, that kind of thing.
6:13 pm
i want to show you something here. the expanded search area is actually much bigger than the initial explosion, tom. they just didn't focus on the initial area, but really for a couple blocks around. why so far? >> the materials in the bomb are exploding and traveling through the air at about 7,000 feet per second. you could easily have material from the first bomb overlap material from the second bomb. so literally you could find a detonator near the second bomb that came from the first bomb. you have this tremendous amount of debris that could possibly overlap, depending on the position of the buildings, and -- >> a critical part that had blown up on the roof tops? >> this is the other first places they looked. this is very common in an explosion to have parts of the bomb go airborne, straight up and over the top of buildings. they even land blocks away. >> let's talk about the second critical time here. the second critical time is the time right before the race. let's change all these pictures to what happewas happening them.
6:14 pm
sweeps for explosives just three hours before this went off. so tom, they're looking at photographs, they're looking at video, talking to all these people and saying, what did you see that maybe at that time did not seem like a big deal? >> right. you had people coming and going all during that time. and again, the belief that timers were used for the device, so somebody could have come there and put the device down and walked away. a long period of time, let's say, before the bomb exploded. i don't think they would have done too long a time maybe fearing dogs would come along and find it and neutralize it. so probably 30 minutes up to the explosion would be the critical time. from the video and witness standpoint, police would want to be looking back to several hours if they can to see if somebody was there a longer period of time or came and went a couple of times. >> this is very different in this crime scene compared to many others, wolf, the simple truth is, every single runner in this race coming down that chute
6:15 pm
was wearing an electronic tracking tag, so the race organizers would know where they were. the runners are busy running, they don't have time to be looking at the sidelines. but they still matter. why? >> the runners probably have family members, colleagues, who are on the sidelines to support them. to know who crossed the line at the certain time, you go to the runner and say who else was there with you, and we would like to interview them and see if they have photographs. >> phone numbers and e-mails and everything else. the last critical period of time is what happened before and after that, whether or not somebody was in a restaurant, whether somebody was in a parking garage or captured by another security camera some distance away. did they see something that will lead to the fourth critical period of time, wolf, and that is, an arrest. wolf? >> yeah, tom foreman, tom fuentes, thanks very much for that analysis. the fbi agent in charge says this investigation is in its
6:16 pm
infancy right now. up next, video from the crucial moments while the marathon was understood way, before the attack. what investigators are looking for in every image. we'll assess for you, and you may have seen the video, a man blown off his feet when the bombs went off. he's telling his dramatic story. ♪ (train horn)
6:17 pm
vo: wherever our trains go, the economy comes to life. norfolk southern. one line, infinite possibilities. how old is the oldest person you've known? we gave people a sticker and had them show us. we learned a lot of us have known someone who's lived well into their 90s. and that's a great thing. but even though we're living longer, one thing that hasn't changed: the official retirement age. ♪ the question is how do you make sure you have the money you need to enjoy all of these years. ♪ over our secure network, verizon innovators are building a world of medical treatment data in the cloud. so doctors can make a more informed diagnosis from anywhere, in seconds
6:18 pm
rather than months. because the world's biggest challenges deserve even bigger solutions. powerful answers. verizon.
6:19 pm
there is a very, very disturbing report coming out of washington, d.c., right now. i'm here in boston. but our chief congressional
6:20 pm
correspondent dana bash is joining us on the phone right now. and i want to be precise, dana. tell our viewers here in the united states, and around the world, what you're learning. >> well, cnn has learned, wolf, that an envelope that was addressed and sent to a senate office was intercepted and tested positive for ricin poison. and i've learned that from congressional and law enforcement sources, myself and mike brooks, who actually got the first tip on this story. now, we don't know which senate office this was original hi sent to. but we do understand that this envelope was tested positive. and a first routine test, it was retested two more times, so it was tested three times all together. each time it came up positive. and that's according to a law enforcement source who said that afterward, it was sent to maryland on an offsite facility to do further testing. we should remind our viewers,
6:21 pm
after the anthrax scare back in 2001, in the fall of 2001, when a couple of senate offices received envelopes with anthrax in it, they changed the way that the mail is distributed on capitol hill, so they now begin for the most part in an offsite. so this was intercepted at an offsite mail facility, was not done -- did not make its way to the capitol. so this is the information that we have so far. i can also tell you that ted barrett, cnn's congressional producer, asked senate majority leader harry reid about this, what we were learning, and he simply responded, rather sternly, i am not going to comment on that, end of conversation. and we should tell people who maybe aren't that familiar with ricin, it is highly poisonous, even in small quantities. it's actually a poison made from caster beans. >> hold on for a moment, dana. because i want to bring fran townsend into the -- the former
6:22 pm
homeland security adviser to president bush, our homeland security analyst right now. as dana said, it's highly poisonous, ricin. this letter that has apparently been tested three times, fran. give us a little sense of proportion what this potentially means. >> well, wolf, it's deeply concerning, because just as we've told our viewers, that the pressure cooker type construction of an explosive device has been touted on al qaeda websites, the use of ricin as a poison, there have been cells, one that comes to mind for me just off the top of my head was in the uk. but there are al qaeda manuals that talk about the use of ricin, and the deployment ricin as a poison. we don't know where the envelope came from. we don't know the threat. we haven't identified the source of the bombing in boston. but these are -- each of these has got some history, some ties, sort of to the al qaeda
6:23 pm
playbook, if you will, and i have no doubt that that's in the investigator's mind as this news breaks. >> fran, hold on for a moment. dana, hold on for a moment. because there's other breaking news we're following right now as well. let me a tribute this to our affiliate whdh here in boston. i want to show you exactly what they are now reporting. these are photos, two photos sent to whdh by a viewer. the first one shows the scene just before, and the other one shows right after the bombs went off on boylston street. you see this first photo here, you see a black bag there along the streets. and then you see afterwards, virtually the same location, the explosion. you see these bags, whdh said
6:24 pm
they provided these pictures to the fbi as they continue the investigation. they're looking in the pictures to see if it's possible it could be the second bomb. in the first picture they say you can see a bag up to a mailbox, up against the barricade along the marathon route. in the second, which they blurred because it's very, very graphic, there is no sign of the bag. that from our affiliate whdh, the fbi now investigating these photos to see if in fact that is the bag that contained the bomb with the pressure cooker device. fran, let me bring you back in. assess what whdh is now showing is this. >> well, wolf, what will happen is, the fbi, in particular, and forensics lab at quantico will take these photographs, the fragments that have been sent to quantico, and this is the painstaking process. when the chief of police in boston says this will be methodical and they will be cautious, this is the sort of
6:25 pm
painstaking investigative steps, they'll try to measure up fragments, small fragments of what's left to what they see in these photographs, and try to see what they can learn in particular about the construction of these specific devices. they'll then try to see what they can learn about the device that's not pictured from the other bomb site in boston. they'll look for things like fingerprints, dna samples. you may find dna samples of victims, wolf, but you also may find dna samples of hair, and skin samples from the bomb maker himself. those are the sorts of details that they will begin to try and get from the crime scene, the forensics and photographs such as these. >> it's very disturbing, because in the first picture before, you see this bag outside of the barricade right next to that mailbox. john king is here. we're looking together at this photo. and you say to yourself, why would they let a bag stay outside the barricade like that
6:26 pm
in an open area, where the marathon is coming to a conclusion? >> that's one of the questions, and the police commissioner was asked about this, are you confident about this plan, did you have lapses in security at the finish line. one of the things investigators are now looking at is you have a larger crowd packed in there when the elite runners cross. and then the crowd shifts a little bit. and this is well after that, about two hours after the elite runners cross. there's a more fluid situation, people are moving about. one of the questions is as the crowd shifts, and as the crowd changes and the pressure is off, did you have your everyday marathoners cross, did the security people let their guard down. obviously the police commissioner said that is something they will deal with after the fact. the focus is now on the investigation. but there's no doubt when they look at these earlier, a police source said there's a frantic review of these photos, not specific about these, but they do believe they have possible, a trm he used, on the devices in
6:27 pm
the locations of the explosions. what they did not have in that conversation a short time ago this afternoon, this source told me was any evidence, video evidence so far of a drop or a placement. so this is part of what fran calls, and the police officers have called the methodical review. but if that happens, someone was able to, while the runners are still crossing the finish line, these are your everyday marathoners, but if someone was able to get that close with a bag that big, there will be questions about a security lapse. >> let's ask tom fuentes, a cnn contributor right now. what's your assessment of these two photos? >> well, i agree, wolf, that they're going to have to be analyzed in detail to determine exactly what we have. it looks bad as it is. but i'd hike to hear more results of analysis to determine what we have. >> wolf, it's worth noting for our viewers, what we're looking at in both the before and after photographs of this -- that we've gotten from our affiliate,
6:28 pm
there will be hundreds of frames in between. and before the picture that -- the first picture of the bomb and the afters, they will go frame by frame through these to try and extract every bit of forensic intelligence they can get to identify the bomber. >> as you take a look at these pictures right now, walk us through, tom fuentes, walk us through how the fbi would go through this process of trying to assess if in fact this is the bag that contained one of the two bombs. >> well, certainly they'll be taking the physical evidence that's been recovered from the debris at the crime scene, and try to determine if it would match what we see in the photograph. at least as near as they can tell, without having the two things together. but they're going to be looking at these photographs, as fran mentioned, in detail. and looking at the sequence of the photographs, and the timing of them. and trying to determine from that what the likelihood is of
6:29 pm
the match. >> would it be normal to just have a bag lying there outside of the barricade close to the runners like that? wouldn't some local law enforcement type notice that, and raise some suspicions, get a dog over there to sniff it? >> well, possibly. but you have -- you know, you have people showing up there to be with their loved ones, and colleagues who are in the race. and maybe carrying backpacks, and may have been there a long time and placed backpacks down because they're heavy. so you have everybody there, or a large number of people there with backpacks. and many of them taking them off, setting them down because they're heavy. moving them around. and montast of the people are focused on the runners and the people in the crowd and aren't necessary hi paying attention to each individual bag that gets left. it's not the same as an airport where they say unattended bags will be picked up and possibly destroyed. here you have so many bags
6:30 pm
laying around and people milling around, moving away from the bags, it's a little bit harder to it determine the suspicion of a particular bag lying around. >> tom, we heard the fbi agent in charge say at the news conference a little while ago, they believe the bombs were placed in what he described as black nylon bags or backpacks. he used the word backpacks, also bags. if there is a bomb and it explodes, how do they know -- wouldn't that bag be destroyed in the course of that explosion? >> no, you know, interestingly, in an explosion like that, almost none of the elements, whether it's the bag, the containers, the bomb itself, almost none of them are completely destroyed or vaporized. they tend to be fragmented, and the fragments get exploded airborne, and pieces of that nylon would be embedded in spectators' clothing that were nearby, or may end up in just on the sidewalk as part of the debris. in most of these cases, they'll
6:31 pm
be able to reconstruct the material that that bag was made out of. maybe even the brand of the bag, if they get a piece of the label, or some other logo from the bag. same thing with containers inside. and what was used to actually hold the explosive, and hold the shrapnel. all of those things will be recoverable if they can find them, and if they can, you know, piece together that that probably came from the device, and was it just part of the other trash that was in the area that got spread around. >> i'm sure they'll be looking closely at this image to see if in fact they blow it up or whatever, if they expand it, to see if it is in fact a black nylon bag, or something else. everybody stand by. it's the bottom of the hour. i want to update our viewers if you're just joining our team conk here in boston here, the other latest developments we're following right now. just a few minutes ago, the third victim killed in the
6:32 pm
marathon terror attack was identified as a graduate student at boston university. the name is not yet being released. investigators now say they believe the bombs were made from pressure cookers filled with bbs and nails designed to cause maximum carnage. president obama's planning to visit it shaken city of boston, the massachusetts governor deval patrick said the president will be here to participate in an interfaith service thursday morning, 11:00 a.m. eastern. we're told law enforcement officials here in boston are now combing through hundreds, hundreds of pictures and videos. they're looking for clues about the boston marathon bombings and possible suspects. and they're appealing to the public for help. >> someone knows who did this. cooperation from the community will play a crucial role in this investigation, and we're asking the public to remain alert, and alert us of the following
6:33 pm
activity. any individual who expressed a desire to target the marathon. suspicious interest in researching how to create explosive devices. the noise of explosions in remote areas prior to yesterday which may have been used as tests by those responsible for these acts. someone who appeared to be carrying an unusually heavy dark colored bag yesterday around the time of the blasts and in the vicinity of the blasts. >> brian todd is here with me in boston. you've been some investigating. what are you picking up? >> on the one hand, encouraging signs. the new pictures we just saw, possibly of the bombs, new information on the materials used in it, bbs, nails, nylon. on the other hand, though, still no suspects. and potentially thousands of frames of surveillance and other video to comb through. investigators are combing through what boston's police commissioner calls the most complex crime scene in his department's history. what makes it so difficult?
6:34 pm
it's two crime scenes, two separate blasts police officials say, debris and people were everywhere. could clues come from the so-called explosive ordnance disposal sweeps conducted before the bombs exploded? >> were two of them done that morning? one early in the morning and a second one was done an hour before the first runners came across. >> that means the time between the last ordnance sweep of the finish line area and first blast was about 3 hours 40 minutes. those sweeps are not air tight, so there's a chance the bombs could have been planted before the sweeps took place. if they weren't that leaves a large swath of time in an open area with a lot of people around that investigators have to examine to find possible suspects. investigators say they need specific evidence to find who's responsible. from surveillance tape, video and still pictures there private citizens and media outlets. boston's mayor told me this about the area of the finish line. >> we have cameras on -- probably the most heavily camera
6:35 pm
neighbor in the city of boston. we're looking for those. a lot of those businesses along boylston street have their own cameras for safety reasons also for theft of their store. >> reporter: google earth shows the area near the second blast. they could offer surveillance video. former assistant homeland security secretary juliet kian said how it could be pieced together with private videos or stills. >> you may look at a pictured and think, there's my dad finishing the race, and in the background there's a guy and he looks like he's doing something normal. if somebody has a picture four seconds later where he's dropping off a bag that that looks sort of strange, and then four seconds later there's another picture that shows him running, that doend end up being that easy, but that's how you put the pieces together. >> it could be that the behavior itself doesn't look suspicious, something's in a bag, they don't know what it is. it could be innocent. or it could be that there's a
6:36 pm
camera shot, but someone walks in front of it, and you can't see the perpetrator leaving a bomb behind. >> and again, new information tonight as to the kind of bombs being used, possibly in this attack. law enforcement officials saying that the bomb materials, the bomb packs had bbs, nails, nylon in them. possibly black backpacks used, black bags used. new information, wolf, as we herd susan candiotti report earlier, they could have been packed in some kind of a pressure cooker type bomb. >> are you getting new information also on what the scope of the explosion? >> law enforcement officials now saying that they found debris on the roof tops nearby. they found some debris from the bombs embedded in buildings nearby. tom fuentes said it carries about a 7,000 feet a second force. that gives you an idea of the scope. debris on rooftops nearby.
6:37 pm
some of these buildings are tall. >> getting new information on a letter sent to the united states senate that has tested positive for the poison ricin. stand by. [ male announcer ] the first look is only the beginning. ♪ ♪ this is a stunning work of technology. ♪ this is the 2013 lexus es and the first-ever es hybrid. this is the pursuit of perfection. and the first-ever es hybrid. we are outta here! finding you the perfect place. hotels.com.
6:38 pm
at a hertz expressrent kiosk, you can rent a car without a reservation... and without a line. now that's a fast car. it's just another way you'll be traveling at the speed of hertz.
6:39 pm
and didn't know where to start. used a contractor before at angie's list, you'll find reviews on everything from home repair to healthcare written by people just like you. no company can pay to be on angie's list, so you can trust what you're reading. angie's list is like having thousands of close neighbors where i can go ask for personal recommendations. that's the idea. before you have any work done, check angie's list. from roofers to plumbers to dentists and more, angie's list -- reviews you can trust. i love you, angie. sorry, honey. ...and we inspected his brakes for free. -free is good. -free is very good. [ male announcer ] now get 50% off brake pads and shoes at meineke.
6:40 pm
this is cnn breaking news. there are so many developments happening right now. but there's an important one happening in washington, d.c., in the united states senate. our chief congressional correspondent, dana bash, has been reporting on the breaking news. a letter apparently laced with the poison ricin was sent to a united states senator. this is a deadly poison, dana. what are you picking up? >> well, we can now report that the senator to whom this letter was addressed is roger wicker, republican senator of mississippi. and we reported this news before most senators even knew that senator wicker had received this letter, which, again, has tested positive three times for the poison ricin. as we were reporting it, there was a meeting of all senators.
6:41 pm
they're actually getting briefed on the developments in boston. while they were there, they were also told about this letter that went to senator wicker. and what some senators coming out told our congressional producers is the following. first of all, senator mccaskill has said that her understanding coming out of this briefing is there might even be a suspect in custody. the suspect is somebody who according to mccaskill, quo, writes a lot of letters. she also emphasized something we reported on earlier, this should be underscored, that this was caught at a screening facility. it did not come to the u.s. capitol. the reason for that is because the process changed dramatically after anthrax was sent back in 2001 to two offices in the u.s. senate. so now they're done offsite. and it was at that offsite facility that this letter was test, tested positive for ricin three times. just to update our viewers, as
6:42 pm
we speak, that letter is at yet another facility in maryland, getting another test just to be sure that it is this fact the poison ricin. >> and just to be precise, dana, one letter discovered so far, only one letter sent to senator roger wicker. did you say that we have a statement from senator wicker's office? >> we do not have a statement from senator wicker's office yet, but what happened was, because all senators happened to be attending a briefing on developments in boston, they were in the presence of the fbi director, the homeland security secretary and others, who used the opportunity to tell them about this news, that we first reported on cnn. and during the course of that briefing, according to one senator who was there, senator mccaskill of missouri, she said her impression is there might even be a suspect in custody, who may have sent this letter. but we're going to obviously try to dig deeper on that and get
6:43 pm
more information. >> as soon as we get more, dana, you'll share it with our viewers. a disturbing development. brings back memories of anthrax, those letters back in 2001, after 9/11 that were sent out to members of congress, members of the media, and others. dana will check her sources and get more information. meanwhile, all over this city and of boston and across the country, relatives of the bombing victims are in shock. in some cases more than one member of a family have been hurt. two cousins were injured in the attack. and they are in the hospital. joslyn, how are your cousins doing? >> hello, wolf. one cousin, she's had a lot of coverage on the news, locally for sure, she's in critical condition. she has extensive leg injuries. she's undergoing second and possibly a third surgery today. i know that that won't be the
6:44 pm
last surgery they're saying. they are hoping that she'll be okay. but for now, she's in critical condition. and that's pretty much all they're saying. it is pretty grave. nicole, she is now in stable condition, and she also has leg injuries. not quite as severe. she's in and out of consciousness and been able to talk at times. her husband is michael, and they're both from charlotte, north carolina. he has been technically discharged today. he had lacerations and severe burns from what i was told. but he has been discharged. so i'm sure he's by nicole's side, along with my aunt carol, and my uncle skip downing as well. >> your aunt was, what, running in the marathon, is that right? >> yeah. my aunt carol was running in the marathon. she's been running the marathon
6:45 pm
for years. as has nicole and recently erica has started running in the last two years. but this particular trip, erica and nicole just went up to support her. so they were, from what we know, they were on the sidelines. obviously pretty near one of the blasts. and it seems the two girls, nicole and erica, were a little closer together, where michael was a little further away from them, because he had, like i said, burns in his trachea, and on his body. so he had a different experience, outcome than the girls. >> joslyn wood-garrish, please send along our best, our love to all of those loved ones who have been so seriously injured in this horrendous bombing here in boston. josl joslyn, thanks for sharing a few thoughts with us. i'm going to be speaking with anderson cooper in a moment.
6:46 pm
he's just wrapped up a conversation with another bombing survivor in a hospital president . >> on the news today we saw where the explosion occurred. i was right in front of a lenscrafter. copd makes it hard to breathe... but with advair, i'm breathing better. so now i can help make this a great block party. ♪ [ male announcer ] advair is clinically proven to help significantly improve lung function. unlike most copd medications, advair contains both an anti-inflammatory and a long-acting bronchodilator working together
6:47 pm
to help improve your lung function all day. advair won't replace fast-acting inhalers for sudden symptoms and should not be used more than twice a day. people with copd taking advair may have a higher chance of pneumonia. advair may increase your risk of osteoporosis and some eye problems. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking advair. ask your doctor if including advair could help improve your lung function. [ male announcer ] advair diskus fluticasone propionate and salmeterol inhalation powder. get your first prescription free and save on refills at advaircopd.com. get your first prescription free geico and we could help youo save on boat and motorcycle insurance too. other insurance companies are green with envy. oh, no, no, no...i'm sorry, but this is all wrong? i would never say that. writer: well what would you say? gecko: well i'd probably emphasize the savings. ya know...lose that green with envy bit. rubbish. it's just a reference about my complexion. writer: but the focus groups thought that the... gecko: focus groups. geico doesn't use focus groups. uhh...excuse me.
6:48 pm
no one told me we were using focus groups. vo: geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance.
6:49 pm
anderson cooper is here in boston, doing some reporting. he's just spoken to someone who is really going through hell right now. >> ron broussard was at the race with his wife, about ten feet away he believes from the first explosion. i talked to him about what he saw and heard. take a look. >> there was just this
6:50 pm
explosion, and very nearby. i mean, it was so close, that you couldn't hear after the explosion. >> really? you couldn't actually hear anything? >> i could hear people moving, but i couldn't hear anything. >> how close were you to the first bomb? one? >> i think we were probably about ten feet away when we saw, on the news today, we saw where the explosion occurred. >> his wife was injured as well. he was badly injured in the leg, a lot of blood loss, but he's doing okay and his wife is doing okay as well. >> it makes no sense. are people saying why? why, why? because that's what i keep hearing. >> he's really resolute and stoic in all of this. he doesn't want this to alter his life. he feels very lucky that the wound could have been much worse, he knows people who have lost a limb and he knows so many
6:51 pm
other people have suffered a lot worse. >> we'll be watching "a.c. 360," thanks very much. so here in boston, i've also been talking to people who survived the deadly terror attack on this city, more witnesses, more stories. >> smoke and debris everywhere. across the finish line, screams, people running. >> people panicked? >> oh, yeah, extreme panic. >> you can see it and you can hear it. marion was sitting in the vip area near the finish line. the first bomb went off thoer righ to her right, the second too her left. the explosion hurt spectators as well as runners. a woman was walking past a restaurant when the bomb went off. >> i felt something, and i hadn't heard it yet. when i got inside, before we got under the table. i pulled up my sweatshirt and i
6:52 pm
realized that i was bleeding. i didn't know it was from the explosion, i thought i was shot or something. >> can you show us the wound? do you feel comfortable? >> you can't really see it, it's under there. >> and it's bloody. yeah, it is. >> we saw this video again and again. the man literaly blown off his feet is 78-year-old bill iffrig. he told his story to cnn's pierce morgan. >> a tremendous explosion, sounded like a bomb went off right next to me and shockwaves just hit my whole body and my legs just started jittering around. i knew i was going down. >> what you don't see in the pictures is iffrig got off and with a little help, finished the race. >> i felt okay, so i told them, i'll be all right, and he insisted on getting a wheelchair over there, and we started to do that and before they had one rounded up, i said i'm only --
6:53 pm
my hotel is about six blocks away so i think i can make it okay. and they let me get out of there and i went on home to my wife. >> good for him. thankfully he managed to finish and he's okay. still ahead a tribute planned for the 8-year-old boy killed in the boston bombings, we're hearing from his father about his family's excruciating pain. try zyrtec-d®. powerful relief of nasal congestion and other allergy symptoms -- all in one pill. zyrtec-d®. at the pharmacy counter.
6:54 pm
6:55 pm
6:56 pm
we're back here in boston, with our live coverage of the marathon terror attacks continues in "the situation
6:57 pm
room." a candle light vigil is planned for tomorrow night for the 8-year-old boy and his family's injuries have touched all of us. john king has got the story and it's such a sad story, what happened? itches at st. ann parish today. you identify your parish, even if you're not a catholic -- an 8-year-old boy, he attended the catholic school, then he attended this community charter school, we went to the charter school where his mother who's still hospitalized is a library, his sister who is an irish dancer. she lost one leg, she may have to lose her second leg to survive. his father was there, he's in shock, they have a 10-year-old son as well.
6:58 pm
it's so eerie, you go to this charter school on queen street which intersects with king street. in the parking lot of the school, where students today were getting counseling. when you look outside, you see an earry look of the mar thong finish line. they grew up on the other end of dorchester, his mother did, it's just people are just stunned, they're stunneded by the scope of this attack, but especially, as we felt after newtown as well, that an 8-year-old has to be among the fatalities. >> the 8-year-old is dead, his sister is in critical condition, lost one leg, maybe will lose the other leg, the mother is in bad condition, serious head injuries? >> and leg injuries for her as well. she was working for the state
6:59 pm
department of highways for ten years, when she was pregnant with the third child. she has a boy henry, the deceased boy martin, and when she was pregnant, she left the state employment, she was at home for a couple of years and she took a job at this charter school. it's a close knit blue collar community, triple decker as we call them in those neighborhoods. they're just stunned there. i talked to a priest at the church at st. ann's, and tonight they're having a candle light vigil, they moved it from the church to a nearby park. gary tuchman was there most of the day, people dropping flowers and stuffed animals. when you have an 8-year-old boy standing near the finish line. with his parents, that could have been any one of us. >> what a sad, sad story indeed. i

133 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on